Culture | Weaving magic

Mary Jackson has turned sweetgrass basketry into a fine-art form

In the American artist’s hands, items once used for agriculture take on new dimensions

Mary Jackson stands alongside two of her sweetgrass baskets that are on display at the African Art Museum in Washinton.
Weaving gorgeous fanciesImage: Getty Images
|CHARLESTON

“NEVER AGAIN” sits at the intriguing intersection of art and craft. The object is both a basket, woven from sweetgrass and palmetto, and an abstract sculpture. Much wider than it is tall, from a distance “Never Again” seems to be of one hue, but on closer inspection you can see that its brown, cream and green fibres converge into purposeful, swirling patterns of colour. Such details encourage the viewer to study the work slowly, the way you might scrutinise a particular patch of a Jackson Pollock painting.

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Out of the ⇔long grass”

From the July 8th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola looks pensive with fans blurred in the background.

Pep Guardiola, football’s greatest coach, is in a bind 

A serial winner is learning how to lose 

Someone reading a book upside down

The Economist’s word of the year for 2024

The Greeks knew how to talk about politics and power


This illustration shows a cracked egg, with its yolk and egg white spilled onto a flat surface. Two halves of the brown eggshell are placed on either side of the spill, and the yolk forms a triangle-like shape.

What do feta, cucumbers and cottage cheese have in common?

Social media and the internet are changing how people cook and relate to food


Germany’s former chancellor sets out to restore her reputation

But her new memoir is unlikely to change her critics’ minds

The best books of 2024, as chosen by The Economist

Readers will never think the same way again about games, horses and spies

What to read to understand Elon Musk

The world’s richest man was shaped by science fiction